Need some advice. Should I disclose or not.

I am a former diplomat for a foreign country in the Midwest well into my thirties and have the good fortune of obtaining an LOR from a federal magistrate. I graduated in 1998 from a jesuit university with a 2.0. I have scored a 148 on the Feb lsat. I am male and latino. (south american)

I have applied to some t-14 reaches and some more in my range. Mostly local. I have recently been diagnosed with ADHD by a reputable behaviorial sciences institute and have supporting data. While I know it is late in the Admissions cycle I cannot decide whether or not to supply my applications with a supplemental addendum disclosing my condition. I know that legally it cant hurt but in practical terms what do you think about disclosing it. I asked my law advisor who is recent grad from law school 03 and she felt that it would help. What do you guys out there think?

I have just started exploring applying for law school and have a similar situation. I am thinking of having a doctor explain my situation since my resume is so choppy. At the same time you have to look at whether they think you can do the work. I would write an essay on how you have completed projects from start to finish using attention to detail showing your leadership capabilities. Disability services could help you get accomodations. 148 is not a bad score.

It probably won't hurt you, but law school admissions is almost ALL about numbers. You can see this by looking at lawschoolnumbers.com. It won't hurt you to submit it, but schools are not likely to have much sympathy for an ADHD diagnosis. They really don't have much sympathy in admissions period unless your story is newsworthy i.e. lost your arm jumping on a grenade to save 20 orphans in Africa or something like that. All schools claim to "care" about soft factors, but they really don't unless it is something like the example above. I would check out lawschoolnumbers.com to see what your chances are at particular schools.

Op- he means your scores are too low for almost any law school, don't waste your money applying to t-14s now. Get treatment. Prep for the LSAT and take it again and apply next cycle. Your ADHD can still explain the low UGPA.

If there is a language issue consider Puerto Rico, they use a different entrance exam, but their schools allow you to practice in the rest of the U.S and are just as good. Good luck.